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  2. Why tourists are drawn to the DMZ between the two Koreas - AOL

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  3. Military Demarcation Line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_Demarcation_Line

    On either side of the line is the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). The MDL and DMZ were established by the Korean Armistice Agreement. [1] In the Yellow Sea, the two Koreas are divided by a de facto maritime "military demarcation line" and maritime boundary called the Northern Limit Line (NLL) drawn by the United Nations Command in 1953. [2]

  4. Demilitarized zone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demilitarized_zone

    The mission of UNCMAC is to supervise the Military Armistice Agreement between the two Koreas along the 151 mile Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). A demilitarized zone (DMZ or DZ) [1] is an area in which treaties or agreements between states, military powers or contending groups forbid military installations, activities, or personnel. A DZ often lies ...

  5. Korean Demilitarized Zone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_Demilitarized_Zone

    The buffer zone that falls south of the Southern Limit Line is called the Civilian Control Zone. Barbed wire fences and manned military guard posts mark the Civilian Control Line. The Civilian Control Zone is necessary for the military to monitor civilian travel to tourist destinations close to the Southern Limit Line of the DMZ like the ...

  6. Heavily fortified North Korea border area a magnet for tourists

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    Only hours after U.S. Private Travis T. King fled into North Korea while taking part in an organised tour on the heavily fortified border, groups of tourists coming from the South Korean side were ...

  7. Dedicated Dodgers fans visit Korea and DMZ, hope to score ...

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  8. Third Tunnel of Aggression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_Tunnel_of_Aggression

    The tunnel is now a tourist site, though still well guarded. [9]Visitors enter either by walking down a long steep incline that starts in a lobby with a gift shop or via a rubber-tyred train that contains a driver at the front or the back (depending on the direction as there is only one set of rails) and padded seats facing forward and backwards in rows for up to three passengers each. [10]

  9. Kijong-dong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kijong-dong

    However, the South says the town is an uninhabited village built in the 1950s in a propaganda effort to encourage South Korean defection and to house the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) soldiers manning the network of artillery positions, fortifications and underground marshalling bunkers that surround the border zone.